Comments

Beautiful dual fuel stove. Pardon my ignorance, but does dual fuel refer to the fact that this stove can use propane as well as natural gas? I'm moving soon to a place where I will need to use propane for my stove or use electricity. I've become a gas stove 'snob' and will be opting for propane. That stove sure is a beauty! Enjoy!

Dual-Fuel means Gas stove top, Electric oven. I much prefer to cook with gas, and bake with electric. However, this stove, and its all-gas Electrolux equivalent can easily be converted from natural gas, to propane by simply replacing the burner gas orfices, and reversing a part in the installed pressure regulator. The replacement orfices are provided with the stove, and it simply requires a small, long shank socket to do it. I use propane, and changed the orfices myself, in the six burners, in about one-half hour.

My old stove also was duel-fuel, and it too came with propane conversion parts. I think this is standard procedure with all manufacturers, but some may charge a few dollars extra for the conversion parts.

Linda, before you finally decide on gas/electric (propane), check on the price per gallon where you are moving to. Here in VA it is $3 and up, making it prohibitive for use. I know gas cooktops do not use that much gas (propane) so that may save the situation. Good luck, new ranges are always cause for celebration! Jean

I consistently used 50 gal. per year with my old stove for 10 years. I was surprised at the consistency, but I have the gas purchase records. Propane has more than doubled in price since I first started using it. We pay considerably more than 3$ per gal. here in FL. Nonetheless, our gas bill per month for May of 2011 through April of 2012 was about $30.00. I bought 50 gal. in May 2012, for the same price ($361.48; $7.25 per gal.) as I paid one year earlier, and I'm estimating (by tank guage) it will last through April 2013 again. I don't consider $1.00 a day to cook on my stove top prohibitive, but others may.

Thanks for the heads up on propane prices - however, one consideration I have is that the island where we plan to move has somewhat frequent power outages and using propane would allow me to cook at least on the stove top when that happens.

I have been considering an Electrolux Icon. Is that a 36"? What is the oven size; not the cubic measure, which I consider useless for an oven, but the inside width and depth? In other words, the rack size?

Oh, so modern and appealing! Love it, and love to think of you happily breaking in a new oven :) What did you bake first?

Also looking forward to hearing your extended review, as my oven is on its last legs- I've already burned out the electronic thingy twice and it appears to be headed that way again soon. The next self-clean cycle is sure to send it over the edge...

I've been able to bake for about two weeks, but the gas wasn't hooked up for the burner top until late last week. I did my first bake--3, 1 lb. sourdough batards--while the stove was still in the middle of the kitchen, using my old oven sized baking stone. Early this week I baked three "official" length baguettes on my new 27" wide Fibrement stone , and since then have been baking Christmas cookies.The levain's building for another three batards tomorrow morning.

So far I'm quite satisfied. My old oven, even in Convection mode, was hotter on the left side by 10° compared to the right side. I mapped the new oven's wall temperatures, and the baking stone surface temperature with my infra-red thermometer--a Christmas present last year--and was pleased to see only 3° to 4° variance. I also bought an oven thermometer, and found excellent agreement between the set temperature, and the thermometer's temperature; well within the setting inaccuracy and any thermometer bias.

The old stone took an additional 25 mins to stabilize after the old stove "beeped" at the set pre-heat temperature. The new stone takes 35 minutes. Yet another confirmation it is important to preheat as much as an hour before loading loaves.

We're doing a big Christmas dinner which will be another good test overall, and I'll run its self-clean mode after the holidays.

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